REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE.
In this essay I defend a skeptical thesis about the meaning of life: I argue that a meaningful life is impossible. I begin by examining the attempts of several philosophers to dismiss questions of the possibility of a meaningful life as either senseless or having an affirmative answer so obvious tha...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1846922015-10-23T04:29:59Z REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. STRUDLER, ALAN. Meaning (Philosophy) Absurd (Philosophy) Life. Values. In this essay I defend a skeptical thesis about the meaning of life: I argue that a meaningful life is impossible. I begin by examining the attempts of several philosophers to dismiss questions of the possibility of a meaningful life as either senseless or having an affirmative answer so obvious that serious philosophical scrutiny is rendered pointless. These philosophers, I argue, offer no conclusive arguments. I proceed to consider some skeptical arguments about the meaning of life. Although these arguments are suggestive, I maintain that they are undeveloped at crucial points, and thus unconvincing. To defend my skeptical thesis, I develop an account of a necessary condition for a meaningful life. I argue that in order for a person to have a meaningful life, he must be engaged in some activity of sufficient importance so that failure in that activity would constitute a good reason for feeling a painful retrospective attitude which I call remorse. I argue that one is justified in feeling remorse, in my sense, only when one fails in the attempt to realize some desire for a categorical good, that is, a desire for something which is good independently of how one happens to feel about it. I argue that we lack good reason for thinking that such justification exists. It follows that we lack good reason for feeling what I call remorse and thus for believing we might have a meaningful life. 1982 text Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184692 682927457 8227372 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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Meaning (Philosophy) Absurd (Philosophy) Life. Values. |
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Meaning (Philosophy) Absurd (Philosophy) Life. Values. STRUDLER, ALAN. REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. |
description |
In this essay I defend a skeptical thesis about the meaning of life: I argue that a meaningful life is impossible. I begin by examining the attempts of several philosophers to dismiss questions of the possibility of a meaningful life as either senseless or having an affirmative answer so obvious that serious philosophical scrutiny is rendered pointless. These philosophers, I argue, offer no conclusive arguments. I proceed to consider some skeptical arguments about the meaning of life. Although these arguments are suggestive, I maintain that they are undeveloped at crucial points, and thus unconvincing. To defend my skeptical thesis, I develop an account of a necessary condition for a meaningful life. I argue that in order for a person to have a meaningful life, he must be engaged in some activity of sufficient importance so that failure in that activity would constitute a good reason for feeling a painful retrospective attitude which I call remorse. I argue that one is justified in feeling remorse, in my sense, only when one fails in the attempt to realize some desire for a categorical good, that is, a desire for something which is good independently of how one happens to feel about it. I argue that we lack good reason for thinking that such justification exists. It follows that we lack good reason for feeling what I call remorse and thus for believing we might have a meaningful life. |
author |
STRUDLER, ALAN. |
author_facet |
STRUDLER, ALAN. |
author_sort |
STRUDLER, ALAN. |
title |
REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. |
title_short |
REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. |
title_full |
REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. |
title_fullStr |
REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. |
title_full_unstemmed |
REASON, WORTH, AND DESIRE: AN ESSAY ON THE MEANING OF LIFE. |
title_sort |
reason, worth, and desire: an essay on the meaning of life. |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
1982 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/184692 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT strudleralan reasonworthanddesireanessayonthemeaningoflife |
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1718097431487315968 |